ABSTRACT
BACKGROUND: Leprosy can have its course interrupted by type 1 and 2 reactional episodes, the last named of erythema nodosum leprosum (ENL). Thalidomide has been the medication of choice for the control of ENL episodes since 1965. OBJECTIVES: These episodes can repeat and cause damages to the patient. In order to prevent these episodes, an extra dose of 100 mg/day thalidomide was used during six months, followed by a follow-up period of six more months after thalidomide discontinuation. METHODS: We included 42 patients with multibacillary (MB) leprosy who had episodes of ENL. They were male and female patients aged between 18 and 84 years. RESULTS: Of the 42 patients, 39 (92.85%) had the lepromatous form and three (7.15%) had the borderline form. We found that 100% of patients had no reactional episode during the use of the drug. During the follow-up period after thalidomide discontinuation, 33 (78.57%) patients had no reactional episode and nine (21.43%), all of them with the lepromatous form, had mild episodes, which were controlled using non-steroidal anti-inflammatory. There were no thalidomide-related side effects. CONCLUSION: A maintenance dose of 100 mg/day of thalidomide showed to be effective to prevent repeated type 2 reactional episodes of ENL.
Subject(s)
Erythema Nodosum/drug therapy , Leprostatic Agents/administration & dosage , Leprosy, Borderline/drug therapy , Leprosy, Lepromatous/drug therapy , Thalidomide/administration & dosage , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Dose-Response Relationship, Drug , Erythema Nodosum/prevention & control , Female , Follow-Up Studies , Humans , Leprosy, Borderline/prevention & control , Leprosy, Lepromatous/prevention & control , Male , Middle Aged , Severity of Illness Index , Sex Factors , Treatment Outcome , Young AdultABSTRACT
BACKGROUND: Leprosy can have its course interrupted by type 1 and 2 reactional episodes, the last named of erythema nodosum leprosum (ENL). Thalidomide has been the medication of choice for the control of ENL episodes since 1965. OBJECTIVES: These episodes can repeat and cause damages to the patient. In order to prevent these episodes, an extra dose of 100 mg/day thalidomide was used during six months, followed by a follow-up period of six more months after thalidomide discontinuation. METHODS: We included 42 patients with multibacillary (MB) leprosy who had episodes of ENL. They were male and female patients aged between 18 and 84 years. RESULTS: Of the 42 patients, 39 (92.85%) had the lepromatous form and three (7.15%) had the borderline form. We found that 100% of patients had no reactional episode during the use of the drug. During the follow-up period after thalidomide discontinuation, 33 (78.57%) patients had no reactional episode and nine (21.43%), all of them with the lepromatous form, had mild episodes, which were controlled using non-steroidal anti-inflammatory. There were no thalidomide-related side effects. CONCLUSION: A maintenance dose of 100 mg/day of thalidomide showed to be effective to prevent repeated type 2 reactional episodes of ENL. .
Subject(s)
Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Young Adult , Erythema Nodosum/drug therapy , Leprostatic Agents/administration & dosage , Leprosy, Borderline/drug therapy , Leprosy, Lepromatous/drug therapy , Thalidomide/administration & dosage , Dose-Response Relationship, Drug , Erythema Nodosum/prevention & control , Follow-Up Studies , Leprosy, Borderline/prevention & control , Leprosy, Lepromatous/prevention & control , Severity of Illness Index , Sex Factors , Treatment OutcomeABSTRACT
Six thousand skin biopsy specimens taken from April 1978 to January 2002 under conditions as specified by the National Leprosy Control Program (NLCP), were analyzed to obtain information about the work of the program and contribute to the knowledge of this illness in the Mexico. Six-thousand request forms for histologic exam of the NLCP were reviewed. Sixty-two percent of the requests had all the required information and in 38% one or more data items were omitted. The age range was 2 to 98 yrs with a median of 50 yrs; a small number of cases was observed in the age group of 0 to 14 yrs, and the peak was in the age group of 41 to 50 yrs. Of the 6000 biopsies, 3693 were classified. Polar lepromatous (LL) was the most common form of the disease, in 60.3% of cases. Twice as many cases were multibacillary leprosy (MB) as paucibacillary (PB). MB predominated in males, and PB predominated in females. The Cohen's kappa index (kappa) of clinical-histological agreement was 0.202 (95% CI 0.184-0.219) and showed a poor grade of agreement between clinical and histologic diagnosis, with a level of significance of 0.05 (p <0.001). The results may indicate the end of leprosy in Mexico, a country in which the national goal of elimination was reached in 1994, with a prevalence since the year 2000 of 0.17/10 000.
Subject(s)
Leprosy/epidemiology , National Health Programs , Skin/pathology , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Biopsy , Child , Child, Preschool , Female , Humans , Leprosy/microbiology , Leprosy/pathology , Leprosy/prevention & control , Leprosy, Borderline/epidemiology , Leprosy, Borderline/microbiology , Leprosy, Borderline/pathology , Leprosy, Borderline/prevention & control , Leprosy, Lepromatous/epidemiology , Leprosy, Lepromatous/microbiology , Leprosy, Lepromatous/pathology , Leprosy, Lepromatous/prevention & control , Leprosy, Tuberculoid/epidemiology , Leprosy, Tuberculoid/microbiology , Leprosy, Tuberculoid/pathology , Leprosy, Tuberculoid/prevention & control , Male , Mexico/epidemiology , Middle Aged , Program Evaluation , Skin/microbiologyABSTRACT
This article reports on a case-control study conducted in Recife, Brazil, between November 1993 and July 1994, to determine how leprosy patients' perceptions and notions influence disease management and use of health services. The sample was composed of 183 residents of Recife between the ages of 20 and 70 years who sought diagnostic services in the dermatology clinics of two referral centers situated in the third, fourth, and sixth political and administrative regions. Sixty-four patients having handicaps or their precursor lesions were classified as cases; the remaining 119 were used as controls. All were diagnosed during the study period. For the analysis, adjustments were made for sex, age, schooling, and a previous history of Hansen's disease among patients. The study revealed the simultaneous presence of two types of "invisibility" of the disease in an area where endemicity is increasing: 1) for patients in both groups, the low frequency of spontaneous explanatory models related to the illness, even in the presence of disease, and 2) for health professionals, the limitations of detection methods. Since such deficiencies affect decisions bearing on individual and collective disease management, they are a risk factor in and of themselves and stand in the way of eliminating leprosy as a public health problem.
Subject(s)
Attitude to Health , Leprosy , Adult , Aged , Brazil , Case-Control Studies , Female , Humans , Leprosy/diagnosis , Leprosy/prevention & control , Leprosy, Borderline/diagnosis , Leprosy, Borderline/prevention & control , Leprosy, Tuberculoid/diagnosis , Leprosy, Tuberculoid/prevention & control , Male , Middle Aged , Risk FactorsABSTRACT
Este artículo presenta un estudio de casos y controles realizado en Recife, Brasil, entre noviembre de 1993 y julio de 1994. En él se investigó cómo influyen la percepción y las apreciaciones de los propios pacientes de lepra en el proceso de manejar la enfermedad y en la utilización de los servicios de salud. La muestra estuvo constituida por 183 pacientes de 20 a 70 años de edad, residentes en Recife, que acudieron en busca de un diagnóstico a los servicios de dermatología sanitaria de dos centros de referencia de las regiones politicoadministrativas tercera, cuarta y sexta. Se clasificaron como casos los 64 pacientes que tenían discapacidades o lesiones precursoras de discapacidad; los 119 restantes se consideraron controles. Todos fueron diagnosticados durante el período de la investigación. En el análisis se ajustó según sexo, edad, escolaridad y antecedentes de la enfermedad de Hansen de los pacientes. El estudio reveló la coexistencia de dos tipos de "invisibilidad" de la enfermedad en una zona endémica en expansión: 1) para los pacientes de ambos grupos, la baja frecuencia de modelos explicativos, espontáneos, relacionados con la dolencia, aun en presencia de antecedentes de la enfermedad, y 2) para los profesionales sanitarios, las limitaciones de la detección. Puesto que afectan a las decisiones relacionadas con el manejo individual y colectivo de la enfermedad, esas deficiencias constituyen por sí mismas un factor de riesgo y representan un obstáculo para la eliminación de la lepra como problema de salud pública.
This article reports on a case-control study conducted in Recife, Brazil, between November 1993 and July 1994, to determine how leprosy patients' perceptions and notions influence disease management and use of health services. The sample was composed of 183 residents of Recife between the ages of 20 and 70 years who sought diagnostic services in the dermatology clinics of two referral centers situated in the third, fourth, and sixth political and administrative regions. Sixty-four patients having handicaps or their precursor lesions were classified as cases; the remaining 119 were used as controls. All were diagnosed during the study period. For the analysis, adjustments were made for sex, age, schooling, and a previous history of Hansen's disease among patients. The study revealed the simultaneous presence of two types of "invisibility" of the disease in an area where endemicity is increasing: 1) for patients in both groups, the low frequency of spontaneous explanatory models related to the illness, even in the presence of disease, and 2) for health professionals, the limitations of detection methods. Since such deficiencies affect decisions bearing on individual and collective disease management, they are a risk factor in and of themselves and stand in the way of eliminating leprosy as a public health problem.
Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Female , Adult , Middle Aged , Aged , Attitude to Health , Leprosy , Brazil , Case-Control Studies , Leprosy, Borderline/diagnosis , Leprosy, Borderline/prevention & control , Leprosy, Tuberculoid/diagnosis , Leprosy, Tuberculoid/prevention & control , Leprosy/diagnosis , Leprosy/prevention & control , Risk FactorsSubject(s)
Leprosy, Borderline/complications , Leprosy, Borderline/prevention & control , Leprosy, Tuberculoid/complications , Leprosy, Tuberculoid/prevention & control , Child, Preschool , Tuberculosis, Pulmonary/complications , Tuberculosis, Pulmonary/prevention & control , BCG Vaccine , VaccinationABSTRACT
The control situation of hanseniasis patients' contacts needs a deeper study which would show the reality in the public health centers and their consequence over the whole country. The increasing of the prevalence rate of the disease added to the bad social-economic conditions of the patients and contacts gave us subsidies to important studies to understand the present epidemiological picture. This research had the purpose of diagnosing the control situation of hanseniasis patients' contacts in a public health center which had, at the moment of this research (1983) 160 hanseniasis patients (incidence of 1.2/1000) and 757 contacts registered in a Subprogram of Hansen's Disease Control.
Subject(s)
Leprosy/prevention & control , Regional Medical Programs , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Brazil , Child , Child, Preschool , Humans , Infant , Infant, Newborn , Leprosy/transmission , Leprosy, Borderline/prevention & control , Leprosy, Tuberculoid/prevention & control , Middle AgedABSTRACT
Se ha observado en los enfermos de lepra, que las cejas y las pestanas reaparacen con los tratamientos sulfonicos , pero se ha observado tambien que el uso constante de anteojos oscuros permite un crecimiento mas rapido